How to be a Happier Teacher

Teacher happiness can be difficult to find sometimes…teaching is among the most pressured and stressful professions.

Look, what other profession provides almost no restroom breaks, works exclusively with developing humans, has a 20-minute lunch, and requires you to spend your own money for your professional tools? (Just take a look at Burned Out, Beaten Up, and Fighting Back).

Let’s face it. Teaching is tough!

But we knew that after our college internship. And we jumped in any way – because teaching’s a passion!

How do we maintain our happiness…even as we try to improve student learning…and even as we press to higher levels of excellence…even when decisions around us don’t make sense?

Teacher Happiness Key #1: Slow Down

Students do not learn more by doing more in a single lesson.

Sometimes we feel like we can squeeze every minute out of the lesson by doing another activity. This doesn’t produce more learning. In reality, it causes cognitive chaos where students are unable to process and organize information in their minds.

Too fast is a blur for students. Too fast is stressful for the teacher. It’s okay to slow down.

Focus on one or two goals in a learning block and then plan only the most important learning activities.

Take your time, model and practice the activity well. Give students time to be successful. They’ll learn more, and you’ll be a happier teacher.

Teacher Happiness Key #3: Stop Teaching

When students aren’t seeming to get it. They just aren’t grasping what you’re teaching, just stop teaching.

No, don’t quit the profession! 🙂 But do stop teaching. Sometimes overexplaining creates less learning. Stop teaching and give students time to process. Use these steps:

Have students write the first 7 words that come to mind with the topic that you’re teaching (i.e. “gravity”, “ordered pairs”, “plot”).

Walk around and observe what students write. This will help make their learning visible to you and them. (Read more on visible learning)

Ask students to explain which word on their list is most important in this topic. Call on a few volunteers.

Ask students to explain which word on their list is causing the most confusion.

This activity will help students to process the information. When they write the words, they are solidifying connections in their brain. When they talk, they are probably explaining the topic in ways that you didn’t.

You’ll be happier, and they’ll learn more.

How do you stay happy in the classroom? What techniques help you to maintain your peace and strength?

[Updated Dec. 2017]

4. Put You First

I’m not saying read your emails before teaching. It’s not to say, drink your coffee and check Instagram prior to meeting with your small group. 😉

It’s about making sure that your health, your relationships, your own state of well-being are at the optimum level.

Only then can you be all that your students need in that classroom! Take care of you, so you can be happy with being the servant leader for your students.

Don’t buy into the false narrative that you are less of a teacher if you don’t:

take home hours of work

grade papers all night

work through the weekend

and other laborious mindsets that sacrifice you and the longevity of your career.

If you don’t put you first, it’s only a matter of time before you burn out.

5. Build a Network Near & Abroad

You work in an isolated environment with minimal adult interaction. Very few professions have as little adult interactions as teaching. You deserve to know, respect, and interact with other professional educators.

6. Connect, Connect, and Critique

There’s often a polar extreme among educators. Some simply connect. Some simply critique.

It’s like there are two types of teachers: those who just like to get along with others and those who can’t get along with others.

Make an effort to find that healthy balance by making two positive connections for every one divergent thought you propose.

If it’s your tendency to never offer opposing viewpoints…challenge yourself to do so. Positive connections combine with innovative thinking create a healthy work environment that leads to teacher happiness and improved learning for all.

Thanks again for reading How to be a Happier Teacher. Please share the happiness using the buttons below and check out this read on making the most of summer break.